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Astronomers have discovered a gas giant, TOI-6894b, orbiting a small red dwarf star, challenging existing planet formation models. This Saturn-sized planet, located 241 light-years away, defies the ...
Science teaches us that stars are much larger than planets, but what about large planets that orbit small stars? This is what ...
Astronomers have discovered a massive gas giant, TOI-6894b, orbiting the red dwarf star TOI-6894, a pairing that defies ...
Star TOI-6894 is just like many in our galaxy, a small red dwarf, and only ~20% of the mass of our sun. Like many small stars ...
Astronomers have spotted a cosmic mismatch that has left them perplexed - a really big planet orbiting a really small star.
A giant exoplanet is surprisingly chill given how close it is to its red dwarf star — perhaps because the star is so little.
A small red dwarf star, TOI-6894, is defying astronomers' expectations by having a gas giant planet in its orbit.
It had not been thought possible that such tiny, weak stars could provide the conditions needed to form and host huge planets.
Astronomers have been left puzzled by the discovery of an unusually large planet orbiting a remarkably small star, a cosmic ...